Washington state Sen. Christine Rolfes was expecting industry lobbyists to oppose her bill making corporations pay for recycling in the Evergreen State. But alongside the usual plastic manufacturers and waste firms was a new opponent — a defender of bubble wrap, cereal bags and takeout containers.
A lobbyist for the St. Paul-based American Institute for Packaging and the Environment (Ameripen) spoke against Rolfes' bill on behalf of some of America's largest corporations — including General Mills and 3M. Last year, lawmakers replaced the regulation proposal with a study.
"I was really surprised that the packaging industry had their own lobbyist," Rolfes said in an interview.
Faltering recycling systems and concerns about ocean plastics have spurred state lawmakers from California to Maine to propose new rules targeting plastic waste, particularly from packaging. Many prompt a visit from Ameripen, a decade-old nonprofit that now has registered lobbyists in eight states.
A General Mills executive chairs the Ameripen board, and its members include other corporate titans like Dow Chemical, Procter & Gamble and PepsiCo. Ameripen's lesser-known members make everyday products like bubble wrap, takeout containers and the flexible pouches that hold nuts and granola.
The political fight illustrates larger tensions that corporations, including retailers like Target Corp., face as they balance competing consumer desires for convenient and sustainable packaging. Many argue they are reducing the use of plastic on their own, without government intervention, like 3M swapping plastic for cardboard on packaging for its Scotch-brand dish scrubbers.
"Ameripen … is a wonderful clearinghouse to stay abreast of packaging policy and legislation. They are all over it," said Ann Meitz, 3M's sustainability director for its consumer business. "What can be really tricky for a company like 3M is if, state by state, people try to implement regulation, that gets really challenging to follow."
Ameripen's lobbyists bounce around the country. It says it is monitoring about 450 bills, with registered lobbyists in California, Connecticut, Maine, Vermont, Oregon, Colorado, Arizona and Washington state.